Mormonism (Part 2)
By Pastor Boffey on Saturday, August 23, 2008.The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints: A Rebuttal
A. Other names: Mormons, LDS.
B. Spin-offs: About 100 splinter groups, the largest of which is the Reorganized Church of Latter
Day Saints.
C. Principal players: Joseph Smith Jr., Samuel & Hyrum Smith (brothers), Sidney Rigdon, Oliver
Cowdery, David & Peter Whitmer, Brigham Young.
D. Official Publications: Church News (weekly newsletter); Ensign (monthly magazine).
E. Scriptures: Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, Pearl of Great Price.
1. Mormonism gives lip service to the KJV Bible, which they deem to be the word of God
"only so far as it is correctly translated." More on this later.
2. Those portions of KJV Scripture which debunk Mormonism are likely to be considered the
passages which are incorrectly translated.
3. Mormonism is really based on its own Books, not the Bible.
F. Organizational Structure: One prophet leads the Church. Beneath him in authority is the Council
of the Twelve Apostles. A third group of men are called the First and Second Councils of the
Seventy. All of these men together are called the General Authorities.
G. Unique terms: Local churches are called Wards or Stake Centers. The Temples are not for
worship, but are used for ceremonies for the living and the dead. Less than 10% of all Mormons
are said to be allowed to enter a Temple.
H. Observations.
1. In about 170 years, Mormonism has attained a world-wide membership of over
11,500,000 (2002). Its growth rate between 1950 and 1980 was 61% per decade.
2. As of 1977, the Mormon Church had more adherents listed in "Who's Who in America"
than any other single religion.
3. The Church itself commands a considerable portfolio of wealth and investments.
4. The Church has an aggressive and zealous missionary program to promote its tenets.
Young men and women are encouraged to dedicate two years to intense missionary service.
I. History.
1. Joseph Smith, Jr., the founder of Mormonism, was born in 1805 in Sharon, Vermont.
a. His father had a propensity for treasure digging and was particularly addicted to
digging up Captain Kidd's hoard. He eventually found counterfeiting money to be
easier than digging.
b. Joe Jr. joined his father in his enterprise of digging for Kidd's treasure, sometimes
using "divining rods" or "peep stones." They had holes dug all around the Palmyra,
New York area.
c. The Smiths had a reputation of being idle mystics who had a deep aversion to real
work and were addicted to vicious habits.
2. Joseph purported to have been visited by God the Father and God the Son in 1820 who told
him that all present churches were abominations and that he should join none of them.
a. There are, though, at least three different written accounts of this First Vision.
b. At least one of the other accounts, in Smith's own handwriting, affirms that it was
only Jesus Christ that appeared to him.
3. This First Vision had follow-up visits by an angel named Moroni, the supposed glorified
son of a man named Mormon.
a. In 1827, Moroni supposedly allowed Smith to retrieve a set of Golden Plates from
the hill Cumorah near Palmyra, New York.
b. Curiously, the Pearl of Great Price has at times stated that this angel's name was
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Nephi, a completely different character found in the Book of Mormon.
c. The golden plates (which have strangely been unavailable for examination) were
supposedly inscribed with Reformed Egyptian heiroglyphics, a language totally
without evidence in history.
d. It is purported that with the help of friends (Oliver Cowdery in particular), Smith
translated these plates into the Book of Mormon.
e. Smith purportedly continued to receive direct revelations from God which further
streamlined Mormon doctrine, and though contradicting previous revelations,
helped gloss over the obvious errors in doctrine and practice which became suspect
over time.
4. On May 15, 1829, John the Baptist was purportedly dispatched from heaven to confer the
"Aaronic Priesthood" upon Joseph and Oliver Cowdery.
5. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was formally organized on April 6, 1830,
having by this time started to develop a following.
6. The Church's headquarters moved to Kirtland, Ohio, then to Independence, Missouri and
Far West, Missouri before finding a resting place in Nauvoo, Illinois between 1839 and
1844.
a. Mormon growth caused Nauvoo to become the second largest town in the state, but
that same growth stirred up troubles with neighboring areas.
b. It was while at Nauvoo that Smith received his revelation about the benefits of
polygamy.
(1) This revelation required a reworking of Doctrine and Covenants which in
1835 had condemned it.
(2) The practice was later condemned by a reversing revelation under pressure
from the U.S. government, a “We ought to obey men rather than God”
scenario.
c. Joseph Smith was jailed in 1844 in Carthage, Illinois and shortly killed by a mob
after he had shot and killed two of them. His death unfortunately confirmed in
many people's minds that he was indeed a martyr and prophet.
d. One month before his death, Smith said this of himself: "I have more to boast of
than any man had. I am the only man that has ever been able to keep a whole
church together since the days of Adam. A large majority of the whole have stood
by me. Neither Paul, John, Peter, nor Jesus ever did it. I boast that no man ever did
such a work as I. The followers of Jesus ran away from Him; but the Latter-day
Saints never ran away from me yet."
(History of the Church, Vol.6, pp. 408-409)
7. In the clamor of pretenders to the Mormon throne, Brigham Young came out ahead.
a. Young led the faithful to the Salt Lake Valley, Utah.
b. Young ruled the church as its President and Prophet for more than 30 years, adding
many unique and strange doctrines to the mix.
c. Young is supposed to have ordered the destruction of a wagon train of 150 non-
Mormon immigrants in 1857, the infamous Mountain Meadows massacre.
8. Because of various contradictory revelations over the years, Mormonism today is different
from its founders' principles in many ways.
J. Shaky foundations. PSA 127:1.
1. Mormonism is built upon the premise that the true church of Jesus Christ passed out of
existence and remained so for hundreds of years until Joseph Smith started it back up
again.
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a. This was/is called the Great Apostasy. Mormon writer M. Russell Ballard put it this
way: "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teaches that God's full
authority was lost from the earth for centuries following the mortal ministry of the
Lord Jesus Christ. . . . In short, the church Christ organized gradually disintegrated,
and the fullness of the gospel was lost.” (Our Search For Happiness, pp. 26, 31)
b. The essence of this premise is a characteristic of the Protestant Reformation.
c. This is a characteristic of every modern-day "Christian" restoration or
reconstructionmovement, such as Campbellism, Armstrongism, Jehovah's
Witnesses, etc.
d. The true church of Jesus Christ, though, would never be destroyed.
DAN 2:44 c/w MAT 16:18; EPH 3:21; HEB 12:28.
e. Christ was given all power (authority) in heaven AND EARTH unto the end of the
world (MAT 28:18-20). Therefore the notion that “...God's full authority was lost
from the earth...” (per Ballard, above) is a denial of Christ's deity and sovereignty to
preserve His government in the earth. It demands a failing Christ.
2. The Mormon Church is also built entirely upon the supposed prophecies and revelations of
Joseph Smith (and those upon whom his mantle would fall).
a. The Bible forbids extra-canonical scripture, God having limited His revelation to
man to the words of the O.T. prophets and the N.T. apostles of the first century.
1CO 13:8-10; GAL 1:8-9; REV 22:18-19.
b. Even if God should have re-opened the gift of prophecy and revelation, a prophet
had to meet two indispensable criteria in order to be valid.
(1) DEU 13:1-3; ISA 8:20. His prophecy had to agree with what had already
been revealed. Mormon prophets have not only contradicted what the Bible
declares, but have frequently contradicted or altered what their own former
prophets have decreed.
(2) DEU 18:21-22. The prophet could never miss.
AA. Joseph Smith made no less than 64 prophecies in which he said,
"Thus saith the Lord..." 58 of them missed.
BB. Smith prophesied that the moon was inhabited by men and women
of six feet in height, who lived to about 1000 years of age and
dressed uniformly like Quakers.
CC. Smith prophesied that the city of New Jerusalem would built be
within his generation in the Western boundaries of the State of
Missouri (Doctrine and Covenants, sec. 84). This never happened
within his generation nor is it yet built.
DD. Other infamous misses were the Civil War Prophecy, the Grease
Spot Prophecy, the Return of Jesus in 1881 or 1891 Prophecy,
and the Oliver Granger Prophecy.
3. Mormonism is founded upon a personal return by Jesus Christ to Joseph Smith.
a. Nowhere does the Bible indicate that Christ would come back to earth in such
fashion.
b. The promise of His return is limited to one final public appearance.
ACT 1:11; REV 1:7; HEB 9:28.
c. Paul was given a special audience: "And LAST OF ALL, he was seen of me also,
as of one born out of due time” (1CO 15:8).
d. If Joseph Smith did see a Jesus Christ, it was not the One Whom Paul had seen.
MAR 13:22.
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4. The Mormon Church is structured upon a series of "apostles" who are under the authority
of the "Prophet."
a. God's church gives priority to Jesus Christ's apostles who were immediately under
His authority. MAT 19:28 c/w 1JO 4:6; 1CO 12:28; EPH 4:11.
b. A true apostle had to be someone who had been amongst Christ's disciples from the
beginning and had seen Him after His resurrection. ACT 1:21-22.
5. It seems evident that Mormonism is an eclectic "strange brew" which Smith put together
from influences in his life.
a. Mormon scholars state that Smith had a fascination with the occult. An occult
magician in Palmyra named Lucas Walters operated by such things as familiar
spirits, a stuffed toad, an old sword and a seer stone. Smith died wearing an occult
Jupiter talisman.
b. 30 miles from the Smith farm in Palmyra, the Shakers had a settlement. The
Shakers believe in new, extra-biblical revelations from God, as do Mormons.
Shaker Ann Lee was deemed to be a reincarnated Christ who could speak in 72
unknown languages (unintelligible to everyone else) and converse with the dead.
Also, the Shakers prohibited the uses of coffee, tea, tobacco, and liquor, as do
Mormons. The similarities are too obvious to overlook.
c. 25 miles from Smith's farm was Jemima Wilkinson, a Quaker who claimed to be
Christ and led her group by revelations from heaven. They practiced communal
living, as did early Mormons.
d. Smith's uncle, Jason Mack, was a member of the Seekers. They believed, like
Mormons, that the contemporary Church was corrupt, the Scriptures defective, and
that the faithful can be validated through Apostolic gifts.
e. Smith was specifically influenced by William Miller (Seventh Day Adventist
principal). At about the same time, both men made predictions about the return of
Christ. Both systems advocate their world dominance through the coming
millennial reign.
f. Smith's teachings mirror also the speculations of Emmanuel Swedenborg, whose
writings appeared in the Palmyra Reflector. Swedenborg considered himself a seer
of new revelations from God which transcended Scripture.
g. Sidney Rigdon came to Mormonism from a prominent association with Alexander
Campbell. Mormonism and Campbellism share the themes of a "restored gospel"
and baptismal regeneration.
h. Smith was also likely influenced by the conversion of Charles Finney. A
comparison of the two conversion stories would not leave an objective reader with
the conclusion that Smith probably did not capitalize on Finney's account.
i. A final influence on Smith was the Masonic order, which he joined. The concept of
secret names, passwords, rituals and oaths were all transported to Mormonism from
Masonry.
(1) To this day, Mormons “in the know” acknowledge that their religion is
that of Freemasonry.
(2) On a flight out of Salt Lake City, it was confided to me by some Mormons
who had been through temple rituals that their mystic undergarments were a
carryover from their parent religion of Freemasonry, the tenets of which are
realized in Mormonism.
K. Curiosities.
1. Mormon priesthoods. Mormons affirm that the priesthoods of Aaron and Melchisedec
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have been conferred upon the Mormon church through Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery
in 1829. They hold that both priesthoods are necessary for others' salvation and no other
organization has them.
a. The Bible insists that the Aaronic/Levitical priesthood has been set aside due to its
shortcomings and the deaths of its high priest which required the transfer of that
office from father to son. HEB 7:11-18.
b. The priesthood of Melchisedec is the sole property of Jesus Christ, Who retains it
exclusively because of His eternal life. HEB 7:21-28.
c. All true Christians have a priesthood which does not require mysterious temples,
secret services and rituals, or such like. 1PE 2:5, 9; REV 1:6.
2. Mormon racism. The historic position of Mormonism is that Negroes are the cursed
descendants of Cain. They (and darker-skinned peoples in general) obviously bear the
mark of Cain.
a. "You see some classes of the human family that are black, uncouth, uncomely,
disagreeable and low in their habits, wild, and seemingly deprived of the
intelligence that is generally bestowed upon mankind....Cain slew his brother....The
Lord put a mark upon him, which is the flat nose and black skin....they should be
the 'servant of servants;' and they will be, until that curse is removed; and the
Abolitionists cannot help it...."
(Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, vol.7, p.290)
b. "Shall I tell you the law of God in regard to the African race? If the white man who
belongs to the chosen seed mixes his blood with the seed of Cain, the penalty, under
the law of God, is death on the spot. This will always be." (Ibid, vol.10, p.109)
c. Until 1978, Blacks were denied the priesthood in Mormonism.
d. True Christianity recognizes no such false distinctions between men when it comes
to grace and the priesthood of believers. ACT 8:36-38; 13:1; COL 3:11.
e. The Book of Mormon has been changed over the years to mollify its clearly racist
leanings.
3. The Book of Mormon. This book is purported to be the authoritative holy scripture of
Mormonism, divinely inspired and translated and even predicted by the Bible in ISA 29 &
EZE 37.
a. The Book of Mormon has numerous internal contradictions which disprove its
claims to divine inspiration (PSA 12:6; PRO 8:8). Please check the various
Christian apologetics ministries for details of these contradictions.
b. There well over 2000 changes which have been made to the Book of Mormon since
its first edition, many of which are diametric opposites to the original. Consistency
is apparently not one of the Mormon God's virtues. ct/w JAM 1:17.
(1) One such textual change was enacted upon 1 Nephi 11:18 which in the
original edition read, “Behold, the virgin which thou seest, is the mother of
God.” (italics added for emphasis)
(2) This Roman Catholic heresy was purged in later editions to read, “Behold,
the virgin whom thou seest, is the mother of the son of God.” (italics added)
(3) Considering the numerous errors and inconsistencies in the Book of
Mormon admitted to by Mormon leadership, Mormonism's charge that the
KJV is riddled with errors and inconsistencies rings hollow and is a likely
case of guilt projection or blame-shifting in an attempt to smear one's
opponent with charges of one's own crime.
c. The Book of Mormon contains at least 25,000 words from the KJV Bible.
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(1) There are lengthy verbatim quotations from the KJV, such as Mosiah 14
being a reproduction of ISA 53.
(2) Smith probably plagiarized the KJV Bible and blended choice words or
passages with his own ideas.
(3) One might wonder why the KJV Bible is used so copiously in the Book of
Mormon if the KJV Bible is so full of errors.
d. Mormons may tend to assume that the canon of the N.T. accepted by Christianity
was essentially a proto-Catholic Constantinian invention of the Nicene Council in
325 A.D.
(1) The Nicene Council at best only confirmed what had already been accepted
as canon by popular use among the churches and God's bearing of fruit
thereby.
(2) The O.T. canon was already well established by the time of Christ and is
essentially what we have today (except for order and arrangement of books)
in a KJV Bible. A Jewish council at Jamnia (100 A.D.) confirmed which
O.T. books were already accepted and had access to the same O.T. canon
that we have today.
(3) Before the end of the First Century, Clement of Rome either quoted from or
referred to half of our New Testament books and called them Scripture.
(4) Numerous other ante-Nicene writers collectively quoted or referred to
thousands of passages from almost all of the N.T. books which they called
scriptures given by the Holy Spirit.
(5) Up to 180 A.D. all of our N.T. books (with the single possible exception of
the epistle of 2 Peter) are quoted or alluded to in the writings of church
leaders and in church manuals.
(6) There was even a compilation in 150 A.D. called the Muratorian Canon
which may have not had four of our current books. The only known
surviving copy of it is in poor condition and is missing parts. Yet in its day
it was virtually universally recognized as the Word of God.
e. Smith may have also plagiarized and expanded upon the writings of Rev. Solomon
Spaulding ("Manuscript Story," "Manuscript Found") which preceded the Book of
Mormon. Spaulding wrote a "romance" with Biblical backdrops similar to those of
the Book of Mormon. This has been a hotly debated topic since the 1830's and is
only mentioned here for historical interest.
f. In 1972 the Book of Mormon gained a subtitle, “Another Testament of Jesus
Christ.” This raises some serious issues.
(1) Does this mean that the New Testament in the blood of Christ (1CO 11:25)
is not the last testament of our Lord?
(2) If the Book of Mormon is the latest testament of Christ, then it has made the
testament in His blood null and void by the rule of HEB 8:13.
(3) If the Book of Mormon was a testament that preceded the New Testament at
Calvary, then Calvary nullifies it by the rule of HEB 8:13.
(4) For a testament to be of effect, the testator must die (HEB 9:16-17) and a
confirmed covenant cannot be altered after the fact (GAL 3:15). Therefore,
if the Book of Mormon is a later testament than the Calvary testament,
AA. Christ must not have actually died on the cross and we are not under
His blood (New) testament.
BB. Christ must have suffered again and then died to confirm the
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Mormon testament (an obviously rancid heresy). 1PE 3:18.
CC. If Christ did suffer and die under the Calvary testament but then
wrote another testament after the fact, He broke His own law (GAL
3:15) and stripped believers of their eternal inheritance (HEB 9:15).
DD. If Christ did not suffer and die under the Calvary testament, but did
suffer and die under the Mormon testament,there is a disconnect
between the O.T. prophecies of Christ's work and their necessary
First Century fulfillment and worse!: we have an inheritance only
according to the Mormon testament.
EE. If Christ did not suffer and die under the Mormon testament, then it
is of no effect by the rule of HEB 9:16-17.
FF. Christ's work on Calvary's cross is the New Testament in His blood;
it is the LAST testament; there could not be “another testament of
Jesus Christ.”
f. The Book of Mormon represents “another gospel” (2CO 11:4; GAL 1:6). It, its
“translator” and its overseeing angel (Moroni) are flatly condemned and cursed
by the rule of GAL 1:8-9 and 2CO 11:13-15.
g. Curiously, according to Summit Ministries' Kevin Bywater's research, “While
Mormons hold strong allegiance to the Book of Mormon, it is interesting to note
that it contains very little distinctly Mormon doctrine. It does not teach a plurality
of gods, that humans may progress to godhood, temple marriage, or baptism for the
dead.....The beliefs of the Mormon church are based primarily on the Doctrine and
Covenants, the Pearl of Great Price, and the numerous teachings of church leaders.
They are based little on the Book of Mormon, and only verbally on the Bible.”
(http://www.christiananswers.net/evangelism/beliefs/mormonism-overview.html)
h. When witnessing to a Mormon who tells you that the KJV Bible is correct as far as
it is correctly translated, kindly have him identify every single place where the KJV
Bible is in error. Chances are that he won't commit to that, in which case you can
call “Foul.” Consider:
(1) If he uses the KJV, then he must know where the errors are in it. If not, then
how does he avoid being adversely affected by the unidentified errors he
reads as if they were truth?
(2) If the KJV is God's word, then the Book of Mormon is not (and vice-versa)
because of the flagrant contradictions between them.
(3) If the KJV is not God's word at all, then it would be sinful for a Mormon to
study it as if some of it were God's word.
(4) Therefore the position that the KJV is God's word insofar as it is correctly
translated condemns the Mormon who reads it without absolute knowledge
of the veracity (or lack thereof) of every line of it.
(5) The Mormon who deems that portions of the KJV are correctly translated
obviously measures that correctness by some standard, presumably the Book
of Mormon. If so, which version of the Book of Mormon measures the
KJV: the Joseph Smith version? Today's version? One of the versions in
between then and now in which thousands of errors and inconsistencies have
been worked over? Mind that the KJV reads the same now as it did when
Joseph Smith lived.
(6) Be prepared for what may sound like the reasoning process of a Charismatic
who relies on feelings to determine truth. Mormons are taught that they
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discern truth based upon a burning sensation in their bosom.
4. Semitic American Indians. Mormonism purports that two great civilizations came to the
Americas: the Jaredites who came from the tower of Babel about 2250 B.C. (and were
wiped out because of corruption); and a group of righteous Jews led by Nephi who
crossed the Pacific Ocean just before the Babylonian captivity of Israel.
a. The latter group split into two warring parties (Nephites and Lamanites). The
Lamanites defeated the Nephites in a final battle near the hill Cumorah in Palmyra,
N.Y., about 428 A.D., but because of their wickedness were cursed with dark skin
and became the American Indian tribes.
b. Before this, Christ supposedly visited the American continent and gave the
Nephites the gospel, the communion service, baptism, the priesthood and mystical
rites.
c. Both of these groups were advanced civilizations which built huge cities, ships,
synagogues, temples and armors.
d. The foregoing is somewhat similar to aspects of the doctrine of the Christian
Identity Movement, the Anglo-Israel belief, and tenets of white supremacist groups
like the KKK.
e. NOTE: There is ZERO anthropological or archaeological evidence for this history
of the Americas.
f. Recall also the previous remarks about Christ's Second Coming according to the
Scriptures.
L. Doctrines.
1. The Trinity. Simply, Mormonism is a polytheistic religion. Its idea of the Trinity is not
Three Persons/One God, but three gods.
a. "I will preach on the plurality of Gods.---I have always declared God to be a distinct
personage, Jesus Christ a separate and distinct personage from God the Father, and
the Holy Ghost was a distinct personage and a Spirit: and these three constitute
three distinct personages and three Gods."
(Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p.370)
b. "....these three are the only Gods we worship. But in addition there is an infinite
number of holy personages, drawn from worlds without number, who have passed
on to exaltation and are thus gods."
(Bruce McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, pp.576-577)
c. Scripture affirms that there is only one God Who subsists in three Persons.
DEU 6:4; ISA 44:6-8; 1CO 8:4; 1JO 5:7.
2. God the Father. Mormonism affirms that the Father God was once a man who advanced to
Deity and now rules over his own universe, demanding our worship.
a. "I am going to tell you how God came to be God. We have imagined and supposed
that God was God from all eternity. I will refute that idea, and take away the veil,
so that you may see....He was once a man like us; yea, that God himself the father
of us all, dwelt on an earth, the same as Jesus Christ Himself did..."
(LDS History of the Church, vol.6, pl.305)
b. "When our father Adam came in the garden of Eden, he came into it with a celestial
body, and brought Eve, one of his wives, with him. He helped to make and
organize this world. He is MICHAEL, the archangel, the ANCIENT OF DAYS!
about whom holy men have written and spoken---HE is our FATHER and our GOD,
and the only God with whom we have to do."
(Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, vol.1, p.50)
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c. In more recent times, Mormon authorities have denounced the Adam-God doctrine.
In 1976, LDS prophet and president Spencer Kimball told attendees of a Priesthood
session of Conference, “We warn you against the dissemination of doctrines which
are not according to the scriptures and which are alleged to have been taught by
some of the General authorities of past generations, such, for instance is the Adam-
God theory. We denounce that theory and hope that everyone will be cautioned
against this and other kinds of false doctrine.”
(1) This turnaround represents significant damage to Mormonism's credibility
inasmuch as it repudiates one of its most noted “prophets,” Brigham Young.
(2) Young strongly defended this position as he did all of his other sermons,
affirming that he “...never yet preached a sermon and sent out to the children
of men that they may not call Scripture.”
(Journal of Discourses, Vol. 13, p.95)
(3) In his 1852 sermon when he summed up his teachings on the nature of God
which included the Adam-God doctrine) he said, “Now, let all who may hear
these doctrines, pause before they make light of them, or treat them with
indifference, for they will prove their salvation or damnation.”
(Ibid, Vol. 1, p.51)
c. Scripture affirms that Adam brought sin, not divinity into the earth. ROM 5:12.
d. There is in fact a spiritual being who agrees with the Adam-God doctrine of
Mormonism. GEN 3:5.
3. God the Son. Mormonism affirms that Jesus Christ is the literal, natural son of the Adam-
God Father and the spirit-brother of Lucifer. He was married to Mary, Martha and others
and begat children through them.
a. "The birth of the Saviour was as natural as are the births of our children; it was the
result of natural action. He partook of flesh and blood, was begotten of his Father,
as we were of our father." (Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, vol.8, p.115)
b. "When the Virgin Mary conceived the child Jesus, the Father had begotten him in
his own likeness. He was not begotten by the Holy Ghost. And who was the
Father? He is the first of the human family and when he took a tabernacle [body], it
was begotten by his Father in heaven, after the same manner as the tabernacles of
Cain, Abel, and the rest of the sons and daughters of Adam and Eve; from the fruits
of the earth, the first earthly tabernacles were originated by the Father, and so on in
succession....Jesus our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh by the same character
that was in the garden of Eden, and who is our Father in heaven." (Ibid, pp.50-51)
c. "The appointment of Jesus to be the Savior of the world was contested by one of the
other sons of God. He was called Lucifer, son of the morning. Haughty, ambitious,
and covetous of power and glory, this spirit-brother of Jesus desperately tried
to become the Savior of mankind."
(Milton R. Hunter, The Gospel Through the Ages, p.15)
d. "Jesus was the bridegroom at the marriage of Cana of Galilee---We say it was Jesus
Christ who was married...whereby he could see his seed."
(Orson Hyde, Journal of Discourses, vol.2, p.82)
(1) Marriage in an LDS temple is mandatory to progress to become a god in
Mormonism, thus it was necessary that their Jesus marry.
(2) Had Jesus not married, he would only be a ministering servant to those in
Mormonism's heaven who have "celestial marriage."
e. This "Jesus" is "another Jesus” (2CO 11:4), and this all bears a blasphemous
similarity to the pagan pantheon of Greece, wherein the gods fathered human sons
through physical union with certain chosen women.
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f. Scripture affirms that:
(1) Lucifer is NOT the spirit-brother of Jesus (rather, he was created
by the pre-incarnate Word) and certainly didn't have mankind's best interests
at heart. JOH 1:1-3; ISA 14:15-17.
(2) Jesus Christ is NOT the product of Adam-God's sexual generation. Christ
was conceived by the Holy Ghost in Mary's womb, who remained a virgin
until after His birth. MAT 1:18-25; LUK 1:35.
(3) Scripture NOWHERE teaches that Jesus married or had children.
4. God the Holy Ghost/Holy Spirit. In Mormonism, a distinction is made between the Holy
Ghost and the Holy Spirit.
a. LDS Apostle Marion G. Romney stated, "The Holy Ghost is a person, a spirit, the
third member of the Godhead." (Ensign, May 1977, pp.43-44)
b. The sixth LDS prophet, Joseph F. Smith affirmed that the Holy Spirit is not a person
but an impersonal force, "You may call it the Spirit of God, you may call it the
influence of God's intelligence, you may call it the substance of His power; no
matter what it is called, it is the spirit of intelligence that permeates the universe."
(Mormon Doctrine, pp.752-753)
c. Scripture affirms that the Holy Ghost is the Holy Spirit of God and is certainly a
person. JOH 7:39; 16:13; ACT 5:3-4.
5. Sin and the Fall. Mormonism actually considers Adam's transgression to be a good thing
in order to bring about man's exaltation.
a. "Adam fell that men might be, and men are, that they might have joy."
(Book of Mormon, 2 Nephi 2:25)
b. "Adam deliberately and wisely chose (to touch the forbidden tree) and partook of
the fruit." (Talmadge, Doctrine and Covenants, p.65)
c. "We ought to consider the fall of our first parents as one of the great steps to eternal
exaltation and happiness." (Mormon Catechism)
d. Scripture denies the concept of “let us do evil that good may come” (ROM 3:8).
e. There is in fact a spiritual being who promotes the idea of sinning against God as
being the way to exaltation. GEN 3:5.
6. Man's Destiny. Mormonism affirms that Christ's atonement puts humanity before a
judgment table where their performance will be reviewed and their post-earthly existence
reward dispensed accordingly. Worthy men become gods with their own planet to
populate with their celestial wives and rule (Celestial Kingdom). There are other levels
(Terrestrial Kingdom; Telestial Kingdom) for the "less than productive" folks.
a. "As man now is, God once was; as God now is, man may be."
(Lorenzo Snow, fifth LDS prophet, Ensign, Feb.1982, pp.39-40)
b. "The Father has promised us that through our faithfulness we shall be blessed with
the fullness of his kingdom. In other words, we will have the privilege of becoming
like him. To become like him we must have all the powers of godhood; thus a man
and his wife when glorified will have spirit children who eventually will go on an
earth like this one we are on....There is no end to this development; it will go on
forever. We will become gods and have jurisdiction over worlds, and these worlds
will be peopled by our own offspring...."
(Doctrines of Salvation, vol.2, p.48)
c. "Celestial marriage is the gate to an exaltation in the highest heaven within the
celestial world." (Mormon Doctrine, p.118)
d. Scripture affirms that:
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(1) There are only two destinies for men: heaven or hell (which will be cast
into the lake of fire). LUK 16:22-23; REV 20:14-15.
(2) Exaltation in heaven has nothing to do with human performance, but only
the grace and blood of Jesus Christ. TIT 3:5; ROM 9:16 c/w 1PE 1:2.
(3) Marriage is unique to this earth. LUK 20:34-36.
(4) Human salvation and exaltation is not a matter of man becoming a god, but
God becoming a man! 1TI 3:16 c/w HEB 2:17.
7. Baptism. Mormonism affirms that baptism is indispensable for human salvation/exaltation.
Further, it holds that present-day Mormons can be baptized on behalf of long-dead
ancestors (proxy baptisms) and thus "save" them. This is partly based upon a false
interpretation of 1CO 15:29.
a. "Baptism is...the very gateway into the kingdom of heaven, an indispensable step in
our salvation and exaltation." (Bennett, Why I Am a Mormon, p.124)
b. Baptism by proxy avers that "The Saints are....redeeming their (unbaptized) dead
from the grasp of Satan."
c. Scripture affirms that:
(1) Baptism is but an outward symbol expressing the inward reality of the work
of grace through the Spirit's application of the merits of Christ's life, death,
burial and resurrection. 1PE 3:21.
(2) 1CO 15:29 is NOT a proof text for their position.
AA. The phrase "for the dead" may simply be expressing that baptism is a
testimony that the dead in Christ shall rise again as surely as did He.
c/w MAR 1:40-44.
BB. Paul may also have been drawing attention to an inconsistency in the
erring professors' position about the resurrection (1CO 15:12). "If
there is no resurrection of the dead, then why are THEY (the erring
professors) then baptized for the dead?"
M. Perhaps the Holy Spirit had the LDS church in mind in 1TI 4:1, “...in the latter times some shall
depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils.”
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